Effect of fertilizer placement on nitrogen loss from sugarcane in tropical Queensland


Autoria(s): Prasertsak, P.; Freney, J. R.; Denmead, O. T.; Saffigna, P. G.; Prove, B. G.; Reghenzani, J. R.
Contribuinte(s)

Paul L. G. Vlek

A. R. Mosier

Data(s)

01/03/2002

Resumo

This paper reports on the fate of nitrogen (N) in a first ratoon sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.) crop in the wet tropics of Queensland when urea was either surface applied or drilled into the soil 3-4 days after harvesting the plant cane. Ammonia volatilization was measured with a micrometeorological method, and fertilizer N recovery in plants and soil, to a depth of 140 cm, was determined by mass balance in macroplots with N labelled urea 166 and 334 days after fertilizer application. The bulk of the fertilizer and soil N uptake by the sugarcane occurred between fertilizing and the first sampling on day 166. Nitrogen use efficiency measured as the recovery of labelled N in the plant was very low. At the time of the final sampling (day 334), the efficiencies for the surface and subsurface treatments were 18.9% and 28.8%, respectively. The tops, leaves, stalks and roots in the subsurface treatment contained significantly more fertilizer N than the corresponding parts in the surface treatment. The total recoveries of fertilizer N for the plant-trash-soil system on day 334 indicate significant losses of N in both treatments ( 59.1% and 45.6% of the applied N in the surface and subsurface treatments, respectively). Drilling the urea into the soil instead of applying it to the trash surface reduced ammonia loss from 37.3% to 5.5% of the applied N. Subtracting the data for ammonia loss from total loss suggests that losses by leaching and denitrification combined increased from 21.8% and 40.1% of the applied N as a result of the change in method of application. While the treatment resulted in increased denitrification and/or leaching loss, total N loss was reduced from 59.1% to 45.6%, ( a saving of 13.5% of the applied N), which resulted in an extra 9.9% of the applied N being assimilated by the crop.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:63299

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic Publishers

Palavras-Chave #Agriculture, Soil Science #Ammonia Volatilization #Denitrification #Leaching #Ammonia #Urea #C1 #300202 Plant Nutrition #620106 Sugar
Tipo

Journal Article